Statutory Compliance: Meaning, Types & Importance

Whether you’re planning a business or opening a startup, compliance always stays at the top of your to-do list. In line with the dynamic world of business trends, statutory compliance is mandatory. Being non-compliant is not only a paperwork problem; it triggers fines running into lakhs of rupees, attracts government inspections, invites employee litigation, and permanently damages your brand reputation.

 

Indian states enforce 423 labour acts, resulting in 31,605 unique compliances and 2,913 filings. This guide clarifies statutory compliance and major regulations HR and payroll professionals must manage in 2026, including India’s four consolidated Labour Codes effective from 21 November 2025.

What is Statutory Compliance? 

Statutory compliance is a legal framework that organizations must follow to operate according to government laws, rules, and regulations. It includes complying with labour laws, tax laws, payroll regulations, employee benefits, workplace safety rules, and industry-specific legal requirements.

 

For businesses, statutory compliance confirms that employee salaries, deductions, benefits, and working conditions are managed in accordance with the law. Non-compliance leads to penalties, including legal action, reputational damage, and operational disruptions. Companies use an HR compliance checklist to maintain statutory compliance.

Why is Statutory Compliance Important in HR?

Statutory compliance serves as the legal backbone of an organization’s HR function. Far from being a bureaucratic checkbox, it delivers tangible, strategic value across multiple dimensions.

 

For Employees

  • It brings trust by guaranteeing minimum wages, overtime pay, and timely salary disbursement.
  • It provides social security benefits, including retirement savings (PF), medical coverage (ESI), and maternity leave.
  • It affirms protection against workplace harassment and unsafe working conditions.
  • Compliance secures rights around gratuity, bonus, and earned leave.

 

For Employers

  • It protects the organization from legal penalties, fines, and potential imprisonment of directors or HR heads.
  • It builds goodwill and strengthens the employer’s brand. Compliant companies attract better talent and investors.
  • The compliance risk associated with aggressive trade union demands is reduced when they demonstrate fair and legal employment practices.
  • The compliance enables smooth fundraising and M&A due diligence. The statutory records are among the first documents reviewed.
  • It ensures operational continuity by preventing government-ordered business shutdowns.

India's four New Labour Codes Under Statutory Compliance

In this section, we list all new labour laws that are subject to statutory compliance. And companies should implement them within their own companies.

 

1. Code on Wages, 2019

The Code introduces a uniform definition of wages (basic pay + dearness allowance + retaining allowance). It establishes a national floor wage that no state can exceed. The Code extends minimum wage coverage to all employees across the organised and unorganised sectors, mandates timely wage payment, and prohibits gender-based wage discrimination for the same or similar work.

 

2. Industrial Relations Code, 2020

The statutory compliance code raises the threshold for prior government permission on retrenchment, layoffs, and closures from 100 to 300 workers, formally introduces fixed-term employment as a distinct category with full parity in wages and benefits alongside permanent workers, and requires a 60-day advance notice before any strike across all establishments, with no strike permitted within 14 days of giving such notice, extending a rule that previously applied only to essential services.

 

3. Code on Social Security, 2020

It is the first time that gig and platform workers are formally recognized under Sections 113 and 114 and brought under social security schemes covering health, life insurance, and maternity benefits. Fixed-term employees are now eligible for gratuity after completing just one year of continuous service, reduced from the earlier requirement of five years, and a single unified registration replaces the multiple registrations previously required under different laws.

 

4. OSH & Working Conditions Code

The Code consolidates 13 existing labour laws into a single framework. It caps daily working hours at 8, mandates free annual health check-ups for all employees, and introduces a single electronic registration and digital record-keeping system for inspections, medical checks, and training documents, replacing a fragmented, paper-heavy compliance system.

These are the measurable outcomes Indian businesses report after implementing HRMS software or a customised payroll solution, based on our customer interviews and published case studies.

Recent Changes Under the New Labor Codes

From 2025 to 2026, some changes occurred to the labour code. Not only the employers but also the employees should acknowledge and understand the changes. Besides, companies should implement them.

 

➔ The 50% Wage Rule

One of the most impactful provisions of the Code on Wages is the mandatory 50% rule. According to the rules, the basic pay, dearness allowance, and retaining allowance must collectively constitute at least 50% of total remuneration.

 

All allowances exceeding this threshold must be added back to the statutory wage base. It directly increases PF, ESI, gratuity, and bonus liabilities for many organizations that historically structure salaries with a low basic component. HR and payroll teams must urgently review and restructure salary architectures to comply with.

 

➔ Gratuity After One Year for Fixed-Term Employees

Previously, gratuity required five years of continuous service for fixed-term employees. Under the new codes, they become eligible for gratuity on a pro-rata basis after completing just one year of service. The new law introduces a significant shift, requiring organizations employing large numbers of contractual or fixed-term staff to account for this in their financial provisioning.

 

➔ Expanded Social Security for Gig and Platform Workers

The Social Security Code formally brings gig workers, such as delivery personnel, freelancers, and platform-based contractors, under the statutory benefits. Companies are required to contribute a percentage of their turnover toward gig worker welfare funds. It is a first in Indian labour law and requires new compliance infrastructure from companies like food-delivery platforms, logistics aggregators, and ride-sharing firms.

 

➔ Digital Record-Keeping Becomes Mandatory

Under the new statutory compliance requirements, companies must maintain and submit employee records, registers, and compliance documents digitally rather than on paper. According to the new wages, the old method of manual registers and physical filing is gradually disappearing for most businesses. As a result, companies need reliable HR and payroll software that handles digital compliance smoothly and stays up to date with the latest filing formats.

 

➔ Fixed-Term Employment Gets Permanent-Employee Parity

Fixed-term employees must now receive wages, social security, and other benefits equivalent to those of permanent employees performing the same work. They can no longer be used as a mechanism to avoid statutory obligations. Additionally, certain states have updated their Shops & Establishments regulations, working hours, and night-shift rules for women employers operating across multiple states, and they must monitor these state-specific notifications closely.

Key Aspects of Statutory Compliance in India 

1. Employees’ Provident Fund (EPF)  

The EPF is one of India’s most strictly enforced labour compliances. It is a mandatory retirement savings scheme applicable to establishments with 20 or more employees. Both employer and employee contribute 12% of eligible wages (basic salary + dearness allowance). The employer’s 12% contribution is split between the Employees’ Pension Scheme (EPS) at 8.33% and the EPF at 3.67%.  

 

 PF is divided into two funds: the Employees’ Provident Fund (EPF), a savings accumulation, and the Employees’ Pension Scheme (EPS), which provides a monthly pension post-retirement. Food allowances, HRA, overtime pay, and incentives are excluded from the PF calculation base.  

 

2. Employees’ State Insurance (ESI)   

ESI is India’s social insurance scheme providing medical, sickness, maternity, disablement, and dependent benefits to workers. It applies to non-seasonal factories with 10 or more workers and to factories without power with 20 or more employees. The Act applies across all states except Manipur, Mizoram, Arunachal Pradesh, and Sikkim.  

 

Employees earning up to Rs. 21,000/month (Rs. 25,000 for disabled persons) are eligible for the ESI. Here, the employee’s ESI contribution is 0.75% of wages, and the employer’s contribution is 3.25% of wages. Besides, under ESI, employees receive benefits such as sickness benefits, maternity benefits, disablement benefits, and dependent benefits.  

 

Also Read: ESI Calculation: Formula, Contribution Rate & Example

 

3. Professional Tax (PT)  

Professional Tax is governed by individual state governments, making it one of the most variable compliance requirements in India. It is a state-level tax levied on salaried employees, professionals, and businesses. For organizations operating across multiple states, managing Professional Tax can become complex, as they need separate registrations, different tax slabs, and compliance with state-specific filing deadlines. In Maharashtra, Professional Tax is generally deducted at ₹200 per month from eligible employees, with an additional ₹300 deducted in February.  

  

4. Tax Deducted at Source (TDS)   

TDS is the Tax deducted by employers from employees’ salaries at the applicable income tax slab rates. After deducting it, employers must deposit the amount with the Income Tax Department within the prescribed deadline, usually by the 7th of next month. For March deductions, the deadline is 30 April.  

 

Employers are also required to provide Form 16 to employees by 15 June every year, which summarises the TDS deducted from their salaries. Additionally, businesses need to file quarterly TDS returns through Form 24Q. If the employer fails to deduct or deposit TDS on time, they may have to pay interest charges and penalties.  

  

5. Gratuity   

Gratuity is a lump-sum payment made by the employer to an employee upon leaving after a qualifying period of service. It applies to organizations with 10 or more employees. Calculation: 15 days’ wages for every completed year of service, based on the last drawn salary divided by 26. 

 

Important 2025 Update 

 Under the new Labour Codes, fixed-term employees are eligible for gratuity after just one year of service (pro-rata basis), down from the earlier five-year requirement for permanent employees. It significantly expands gratuity liability for organizations with high fixed-term or contractual headcounts.  

  

6. Payment of Bonus   

The bonus applies to employees earning up to Rs. 21,000 per month in companies with 20 or more employees. The minimum bonus is 8.33%, and the maximum is 20% of the annual salary. The bonus must be paid within 8 months of the closing of the accounting year. Only basic salary and DA are considered bonus calculation; HRA, overtime, and other allowances are excluded.  

 

An employee may be disqualified from receiving a bonus if dismissed for fraud, violence, sabotage, theft, or serious misconduct which provided the employer has followed proper domestic inquiry procedures, documented the misconduct, and obtained employee acceptance of findings.  

 

7. Labour Welfare Fund (LWF)  

The Labour Welfare Fund Act aims to improve working conditions, housing, medical care, nutritional standards, and educational benefits for workers and their families. LWF is state-governed and is applicable in 16 states, including Andhra Pradesh, Chandigarh, Chhattisgarh, Delhi, Goa, Gujarat, Haryana, Karnataka, Kerala, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Odisha, Punjab, Tamil Nadu, Telangana, and West Bengal. The contribution amounts vary significantly by state and are specified under the corresponding State Legislation. Deductions are usually made from employees’ wages at defined intervals, such as monthly, half-yearly, or annually, depending on the state.  

 

8. Maternity Benefit  

The Maternity Benefit Act applies to establishments with 10 or more employees. It provides 26 weeks of paid maternity leave for the first two children (12 weeks for the third child and beyond), and 12 weeks for adoptive or commissioning mothers. A woman must have worked for 80 days in the preceding 12 months to be eligible.  

 

Establishments covered under ESI pay maternity benefits through the ESIC scheme. Those not covered under ESI must pay directly. The Act also mandates a crèche facility for establishments with 50 or more employees, as well as nursing breaks during the day.  

 

Also Read: What is Maternity Leave?: Meaning, Policy & Rules

 

9. Minimum Wages   

The Minimum Wages Act requires employers to pay at least the statutory minimum wage to their workers. Rates are determined by both the Central Government (for scheduled central employment) and State Governments (for state-specific employment). Rates are usually revised every six months, based on the cost of living. They differ by geographic zone, skill category (unskilled, semi-skilled, skilled, highly skilled), and industry sector.  

 

Under the new Code on Wages, 2019, a statutory National Floor Wage is established, and no worker in India can be paid below this baseline, regardless of state-level minimum wages. 

  

10. Shops & Establishments Act  

It is a state-specific law governing working hours, weekly offs, overtime, leaves, opening and closing hours, the employment of women and children, and the maintenance of registers for commercial establishments such as shops, offices, restaurants, hotels, and similar businesses. Every business establishment must register under the applicable State Shops & Establishments Act within 30 days of starting operations. Registration must be renewed annually in most states.  

 

Several states have updated their Shops & Establishments rules following the Labour Code rollout, including revised working hour provisions and night-shift permissions for women employees.  

 

11. Contract Labour   

The Act regulates the employment of contract labour to prevent exploitation and confirm fair working conditions. In a company, employers with 20 or more contract workers must register under the Act that mandates that contractors provide adequate welfare amenities (canteen, rest rooms, first aid) and ensure timely payment of wages.  

 

The new Labour Codes bring contract and fixed-term workers significantly closer to permanent employees in terms of entitlements. Organizations must confirm that the vendors they engage also comply with wage, safety, and social security obligations.  

 

12. Prevention of Sexual Harassment (POSH)  

The POSH Act mandates every establishment with 10 or more employees to constitute an Internal Complaints Committee (ICC) with a woman presiding officer and at least one external NGO member. The organization must have a written sexual harassment prevention policy, conduct annual awareness and submit an Annual Report to the District Officer every year.  

 

Under the new Labour Codes, POSH no longer operates in isolation. Financial penalties arising from ICC findings must follow wage deduction rules (total deductions capped at 50% of wages), and all POSH-related records must be preserved for five years and integrated into the unified annual return. The POSH policy must also be extended to gig and platform workers.  

Here is the list of the key deadlines for HR and Payroll Teams

Deadline management is the key to statutory compliance. Missing a filing date, even by a single day, can attract interest, penalties, and government notices. The following consolidated calendar covers the most critical recurring obligations.  
Compliance Frequency Due Date Authority
EPF (ECR + Contribution) Monthly 15th of the following month EPFO
ESI Contribution + Return Monthly 15th of the following month ESIC
TDS Deposit Monthly 7th of the following month (30 April for March) Income Tax Department
Professional Tax Monthly / Quarterly / Half-yearly State-specific (15th or 20th) State Government
TDS Return (Form 24Q) Quarterly 31st of the month after quarter-end Income Tax Department
Labour Welfare Fund Monthly / Half-yearly / Annually State-specific State Labour Department
Form 16 (TDS Certificate) Annual 15 June Income Tax Department
Payment of Bonus Annual Within 8 months of the accounting year closure Labour Department
POSH Annual Report Annual Before 31 January (calendar year) District Officer
Shops & Establishment Renewal Annual State-specific date Local Authority
PF Annual Return Annual 30 April EPFO

Penalties at a Glance

The four Labour Codes introduce a nuanced penalty framework. Minor procedural lapses are largely decriminalized for first-time offenders, with fines replacing imprisonment. However, serious violations such as non-payment of wages, unsafe working conditions, and repeated defaults continue to attract severe penalties.  
Violation Potential Penalty
EPF default / late deposit Interest at 12% p.a. + penal damages up to 25% of arrears + fines up to ₹10,000 + imprisonment up to 3 years.
ESI default Interest at 12% p.a. + penalty + recovery proceedings by ESIC.
TDS non-deduction / late deposit Interest at 1%–1.5% per month + penalty equal to the TDS amount + prosecution.
Minimum Wages Act violation Fines ranging from thousands to several lakhs, with higher penalties for repeat offences.
POSH Act non-compliance Fine up to ₹50,000; cancellation of business licence for repeated offences.
Contract Labour Act default Fine up to ₹1,000 per day of continuing default.
Labour Code violations (general) Fines up to several lakhs, blacklisting from government contracts, or business shutdown in severe cases.

The function of HR in Statutory Compliance

The Hr department is the primary custodian of statutory compliance within any organization. In this section, let’s discuss how the HR professional maintains statutory compliance while managing employee relations.

 

1. At Onboarding

  • HR can register new employees on the EPFO and ESIC portals, generate UANs, and enrol them in applicable schemes.
  • They can issue appointment letters (now mandatory under Labour Codes) with all statutory terms clearly stated.
  • Moreover, they can collect and verify PAN, Aadhaar, and bank account details for accurate payroll and TDS compliance.
  • Besides, the HR teams can confirm that salary structures comply with the 50% wage rule and state minimum wages.

 

2. During Employment

  • HR can process monthly payroll with accurate deductions for PF, ESI, PT, TDS, and LWF.
  • They can file monthly, quarterly, and annual returns with EPFO, ESIC, and Income Tax authorities.
  • Besides, the team can maintain digital statutory registers like attendance, wages, overtime, leaves, and deductions.
  • And they can track and implement changes to state-level minimum wages (typically revised every 6 months).
  • Moreover, HR can conduct periodic internal compliance audits and remediate findings before external inspections.
  • Ultimately, the team can manage POSH policy, ICC functioning, awareness training, and annual reporting.

 

3. At Separation

  • During employee separation, HR can process the Full and Final settlement, including PF withdrawal assistance, gratuity calculation, and TDS on FnF.
  • With compliance, HR can issue Form 16, a relieving letter, an experience letter, and all statutory exit documents smoothly.
  • With the statutory compliance, HR can file the necessary EPFO and ESIC exit forms on time to protect employees’ benefit continuity.

Conclusion

Statutory compliance is an essential part of running a responsible and well-managed business. Proper compliance with payroll, employee benefits, wages, and Labour laws helps organizations avoid penalties, maintain smooth operations, and build employee trust. Regular monitoring of legal requirements and maintaining accurate records also support business credibility, operational efficiency, and long-term organizational growth.

FAQs on Statutory Compliance

What is the difference between statutory compliance and HR policy compliance?

Statutory compliance refers to legally enforceable obligations set by the government, such as PF deductions, minimum wages, and ESIC registration. HR policy compliance concerns an organization’s internal rules (e.g., leave policies, performance management, and codes of conduct).

The four Labour Codes are the Code on Wages 2019, the Code on Social Security 2020, the Industrial Relations Code 2020, and the Occupational Safety, Health and Working Conditions Code 2020. The codes came into force on 21 November 2025. They consolidate 29 older central labour laws into a unified framework designed to simplify compliance, expand worker protections, and mandate digital processes.

Minimum wages are revised regularly by state governments, usually every six months or once a year. The Central Government also periodically updates wages for certain industries. Under the Code on Wages, a National Floor Wage ensures workers receive a basic minimum level of pay across India. HR and payroll teams must regularly track these updates to remain compliant.

Even a single day’s delay on PF or ESI contributions attracts interest at 12% per annum on the outstanding amount, plus penal damages of up to 25% of arrears. Repeated defaults can result in prosecution, fines of Rs. 10,000 and above, and up to three years’ imprisonment for responsible persons. EPFO and ESIC now use system-based cross-checks, so delays are quickly flagged. 

Yes, for any organization with 10 or more employees. The POSH Act mandates the formation of an Internal Complaints Committee, a written anti-sexual harassment policy, annual awareness training, and an Annual Compliance Report to the District Officer. Under the new Labour Codes, POSH obligations also extend to gig and platform workers, and financial penalties from ICC findings must comply with wage deduction rules. 

Pratyusha Chakraborty is the Content Writer at Pocket HRMS. Her creative thought brings fresh and engaging perspectives to the HR domain. When the clatter of her keyboard doesn’t come from her desk, colleagues often find her with a sketchbook and colours.

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